The 1939 Major League Baseball season was contested from April 17 to October 8, 1939. The
Cincinnati Reds and
New York Yankees were the regular season champions of the
National League and
American League, respectively. The Yankees then defeated the Reds in the
World Series, four games to zero. The Yankees became the first team to win the World Series four years in a row.
April 20 – The
Boston Red Sox show off their prize rookie
Ted Williams before 30,278 in Opening Day at
Yankee Stadium, delayed two days because of rain. After striking out twice, Williams collects a double off pitcher
Red Ruffing, who wins 2–0.
Yankees first baseman
Lou Gehrig makes an error, goes hitless, and lines into two double plays in the only game featuring the two great sluggers. Other notables in what will become a historic box score include
Joe DiMaggio,
Bill Dickey,
Jimmie Foxx,
Joe Cronin,
Bobby Doerr,
Red Rolfe, and losing pitcher
Lefty Grove. The Yankees score their first run on a home run by Dickey and their second tally on an error by Foxx. Boston has baserunners in each inning, but Ruffing tosses just the second opening day shutout in Yankees history. Four umpires work the game including third base umpire
George Pipgras, the starting pitcher for the Yankees in the 1929 opener; his opponent for the Red Sox that day was Ruffing.
April 29 – In the seventh game of the season,
New York Yankees center fielder
Joe DiMaggio makes a sharp turn while fielding a liner facing the
Washington Senators and tears muscles in his right foot. The Yankees lose the game and DiMaggio will miss the next 35 games.
April 30 –
Lou Gehrig goes hitless in four at-bats against the
Washington Senators and is now hitting just .143 this season. He had just played his 2,130th consecutive major league game. No one knew it would be the last of his career.
May 4 – The mother of
Cleveland Indians pitcher
Bob Feller watches her son pitch for the first time, against the
Chicago White Sox. Chicago player
Marv Owen fouled a pitch into the stands which knocked her out. She recovered, but would need stitches to close the wound.[17]
July 4 –
Lou Gehrig day was held at
Yankee Stadium. Numerous people, including many from other major league teams, came forward to give Gehrig gifts and to shower praise on the dying slugger. The
Yankees retired his uniform number 4; the first player in major league history to be afforded that honor.
Babe Ruth even showed up and ended their long-standing feud by giving his old teammate a hug. After the presentations, Gehrig approached the microphone, and addressed the crowd: "Fans, for the past two weeks you have been reading about a bad break I got. Yet today, I consider myself the luckiest man on the face of the earth. I have been to ballparks for seventeen years and I have never received anything but kindness and encouragement from you fans."
July 25 – Yankees pitcher
Atley Donald sets a league record for consecutive wins by a rookie, bringing his record to 12–0 with a 5–1 victory over the St. Louis Browns.
July 26 – The New York Yankees tied a major league record by scoring in every inning against the St. Louis Browns.
Bill Dickey hit three home runs in the 14–1 win.
August 9 –
Red Rolfe of the New York Yankees started a streak of 18 consecutive games in which he scored at least one run. During those games, he scored a total of 30 runs.
December 6 – In a trade of veteran shortstops, or "worn-out shortstops", as one newspaper described it, the
Chicago Cubs acquire
Billy Rogell from the
Detroit Tigers for
Dick Bartell. Rogell, who injured his arm playing handball the previous year, hits just .136 before hanging up his spikes. The Tigers will release "Rowdy Richard" five games into the 1941 season, but he will stick with the
New York Giants until 1946.
Deaths
January 13 –
Jacob Ruppert, 71, Yankees owner since 1914
January 19 –
Cliff Heathcote, 40, NL outfielder who batted .275 over 15 seasons
January 25 –
Abner Dalrymple, 81, star outfielder of the 1880s, leadoff hitter for five Chicago pennant winners
March 8 –
Scott Stratton, 69, pitcher, primarily with Louisville, who posted a 34-win season in 1890 which included 15 straight victories
March 28 –
Fred Goldsmith, 82, pitcher who steadfastly maintained that he had first thrown the curveball in 1870, six years earlier than
Candy Cummings, who gained credit for the development
May 24 –
Barney Pelty, 58, pitcher for the St. Louis Browns and one of the first Jewish players in the AL
June 17 –
Allen Sothoron, 46, spitball pitcher who spent most of his career with the St. Louis Browns and Cardinals
July 7 –
Deacon White, 91, star bare-handed catcher and third baseman for six championship teams in the 1870s and 1880s, and the fourth player to collect 1000 hits
September 25 –
Frank LaPorte, 59, infielder who batted .300 three times and led the Federal League in RBIs in 1914
December 3 –
Frank Killen, 69, winner of 164 games from 1891 to 1900, including two 30-win seasons
December 18 –
Heywood Broun, 51, sportswriter and editor in New York City since the early 1910s
December 26 –
Clyde Engle, 55, utility player who scored the tying run for Boston in the 10th inning of Game 8 of the 1912 World Series, after his earlier pop fly had been dropped
The 1939 Major League Baseball season was contested from April 17 to October 8, 1939. The
Cincinnati Reds and
New York Yankees were the regular season champions of the
National League and
American League, respectively. The Yankees then defeated the Reds in the
World Series, four games to zero. The Yankees became the first team to win the World Series four years in a row.
April 20 – The
Boston Red Sox show off their prize rookie
Ted Williams before 30,278 in Opening Day at
Yankee Stadium, delayed two days because of rain. After striking out twice, Williams collects a double off pitcher
Red Ruffing, who wins 2–0.
Yankees first baseman
Lou Gehrig makes an error, goes hitless, and lines into two double plays in the only game featuring the two great sluggers. Other notables in what will become a historic box score include
Joe DiMaggio,
Bill Dickey,
Jimmie Foxx,
Joe Cronin,
Bobby Doerr,
Red Rolfe, and losing pitcher
Lefty Grove. The Yankees score their first run on a home run by Dickey and their second tally on an error by Foxx. Boston has baserunners in each inning, but Ruffing tosses just the second opening day shutout in Yankees history. Four umpires work the game including third base umpire
George Pipgras, the starting pitcher for the Yankees in the 1929 opener; his opponent for the Red Sox that day was Ruffing.
April 29 – In the seventh game of the season,
New York Yankees center fielder
Joe DiMaggio makes a sharp turn while fielding a liner facing the
Washington Senators and tears muscles in his right foot. The Yankees lose the game and DiMaggio will miss the next 35 games.
April 30 –
Lou Gehrig goes hitless in four at-bats against the
Washington Senators and is now hitting just .143 this season. He had just played his 2,130th consecutive major league game. No one knew it would be the last of his career.
May 4 – The mother of
Cleveland Indians pitcher
Bob Feller watches her son pitch for the first time, against the
Chicago White Sox. Chicago player
Marv Owen fouled a pitch into the stands which knocked her out. She recovered, but would need stitches to close the wound.[17]
July 4 –
Lou Gehrig day was held at
Yankee Stadium. Numerous people, including many from other major league teams, came forward to give Gehrig gifts and to shower praise on the dying slugger. The
Yankees retired his uniform number 4; the first player in major league history to be afforded that honor.
Babe Ruth even showed up and ended their long-standing feud by giving his old teammate a hug. After the presentations, Gehrig approached the microphone, and addressed the crowd: "Fans, for the past two weeks you have been reading about a bad break I got. Yet today, I consider myself the luckiest man on the face of the earth. I have been to ballparks for seventeen years and I have never received anything but kindness and encouragement from you fans."
July 25 – Yankees pitcher
Atley Donald sets a league record for consecutive wins by a rookie, bringing his record to 12–0 with a 5–1 victory over the St. Louis Browns.
July 26 – The New York Yankees tied a major league record by scoring in every inning against the St. Louis Browns.
Bill Dickey hit three home runs in the 14–1 win.
August 9 –
Red Rolfe of the New York Yankees started a streak of 18 consecutive games in which he scored at least one run. During those games, he scored a total of 30 runs.
December 6 – In a trade of veteran shortstops, or "worn-out shortstops", as one newspaper described it, the
Chicago Cubs acquire
Billy Rogell from the
Detroit Tigers for
Dick Bartell. Rogell, who injured his arm playing handball the previous year, hits just .136 before hanging up his spikes. The Tigers will release "Rowdy Richard" five games into the 1941 season, but he will stick with the
New York Giants until 1946.
Deaths
January 13 –
Jacob Ruppert, 71, Yankees owner since 1914
January 19 –
Cliff Heathcote, 40, NL outfielder who batted .275 over 15 seasons
January 25 –
Abner Dalrymple, 81, star outfielder of the 1880s, leadoff hitter for five Chicago pennant winners
March 8 –
Scott Stratton, 69, pitcher, primarily with Louisville, who posted a 34-win season in 1890 which included 15 straight victories
March 28 –
Fred Goldsmith, 82, pitcher who steadfastly maintained that he had first thrown the curveball in 1870, six years earlier than
Candy Cummings, who gained credit for the development
May 24 –
Barney Pelty, 58, pitcher for the St. Louis Browns and one of the first Jewish players in the AL
June 17 –
Allen Sothoron, 46, spitball pitcher who spent most of his career with the St. Louis Browns and Cardinals
July 7 –
Deacon White, 91, star bare-handed catcher and third baseman for six championship teams in the 1870s and 1880s, and the fourth player to collect 1000 hits
September 25 –
Frank LaPorte, 59, infielder who batted .300 three times and led the Federal League in RBIs in 1914
December 3 –
Frank Killen, 69, winner of 164 games from 1891 to 1900, including two 30-win seasons
December 18 –
Heywood Broun, 51, sportswriter and editor in New York City since the early 1910s
December 26 –
Clyde Engle, 55, utility player who scored the tying run for Boston in the 10th inning of Game 8 of the 1912 World Series, after his earlier pop fly had been dropped